Classifying the cardinalities of types

I'm developing a programming language similar in its type structure to
McAllester's Ontic, where types and values are represented in a unified,
dependent-typed framework. One of the major problems of the compiler is to
characterize the cardinalities of various types in programs, and I'm posting
this to informally share my results, and see if anyone has references to
similar work. Here goes:
Every type T can be thought of as having a cardinality, Card(T)
characterizing the number of unique elements of that type T. The
cardinality of the empty type is 0, the cardinality of the unit type is 1,
the cardinality of the boolean type is 2, the cardinality of the natural
numbers is a countably infinite cardinal.
In this language, we can say:
- "1" is a single value, so it's cardinality 1.
- "1|2|3" is either 1, 2, or 3. It has 3 potential values, so its
cardinality is 3.
- "a-natural-number" can potentially be any natural number, so its
cardinality is countably infinite.
- Given a variable "x" representing an unknown natural number, "x|3" reduces
to the single value "3" if x=3, or the two distinct potential values "x" and
"3" if x!=3. In this case, we have to say its cardinality is 1|2. Thus to
each term the compiler assigns not a single cardinality, but a set of
potential cardinalities.
Characterizing the precise set of potential cardinalities of a term is a
hard problem, especially as the complexity of the type system grows.
However, conservatively approximating the potential cardinalities of an
expression is tractable, and this is the course I've pursued.
I draw potential cardinalities from the set {0,1,m} where "m" stands for
"many". Thus we can precisely characterize the cardinality of the empty
type as 0 and the unit type as 1, while the cardinality of 1|2|3 and
a-natural-number are both conservatively approximated as "m". The
expression "x|3" above has cardinality 1|m.
This affects the language design in the following way. Each type-theoretic
operator (such as "intersection of types", "union of types", "product
types", "disjoint union of types" has a table characterizing the potential
cardinality of the result as a function of the cardinalities of the input.
For example, in {0,1,m} approximation, in a language with only atomic values
and not functions, we can describe the union operation with:
{0} {1} {m}
{1} {1|m} {m}
{m} {m} {m}
In other words, the union of 0 with an element cardinality x is itself x,
while the union of two elements of cardinality 1 can either be of
cardinality 1 (if the elements are equal) or m (if unequal).
Everything I've said so far can be applied to set theory as well as type
theory.
Now, the presence of functions in the type system complicates the
cardinality characterization considerably, and becomes dependent on the
intricate details of the type theory.
If the full variance of functions is built into the type theory, then every
function of the form a->b is a subtype of c->d if b<:c and c<:a. In a type
system without a universal element (u such that every type in the type
theory is a subtype of u), every function is of cardinality "m", because
every function has infinitely many subtypes. In the presence of a universal
element, functions from the universal element to elements of cardinality 1
is itself of cardinality 1 because there are no subelements.
Since practical functions like lambda(x:a-natural-number).x have infinitely
many subelements, they receive cardinality "m". This isn't completely
satisfactory, because my language requires that programs be observationally
deterministic -- "3" is a valid program, while "3|4" is not (though 3|4 may
be used as an intermediate term in part of the program, for example as the
domain of a function). Unfortunately classifying a function as cardinality
"m" (which is necessary for the cardinality to be correct) prevented
programs from being functions.
The realization that saved the day is that we can make a distinction between
items that are observably multivalued (like 1|2) and items that are
observably single-valued (like that function above) but, because of the
nature of function variance, are inhabited by multiple subelements. To make
the distinction, I draw cardinalities from the set {0,1,m,1f,mf} where
{1f,mf} categorize sets of functions and {1,m} categorize sets of atomic
values. Examples:
"1" has cardinality 1
"1|2" has cardinality m
"lambda(x:a-natural-number).x" has cardinality 1f.
"lambda(x:a-natural-number).x|x+1" has cardinality mf.
"1|2|lambda(x:a-natural-number).x" has cardinality m|om.
I have lookup tables for all of the basic type operations over the
cardinality set {0,1,m,1f,mf} and everything behaves as expected. I can
think of many extensions to the cardinality set of varying degress of
usefulness but {0,1,m,1f,mf} seems sufficient for my purposes.
I'm interested if anybody has any comments or references to similar work.
So far the only discussion I've found of cardinality is in the paper on
Mercury (www.cs.mu.oz.au/research/mercury/information/
doc-latest/reference_manual_6.html), where there is a lattice of
"determinism categories", and that only scratches the surface.
-Tim